Guides you through creating a Geoffrey Moore positioning statement for your product, covering target customer, unmet need, category, benefit, and differentiation from alternatives.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/product-manager-skills:positioning-statement [product] [target customer][product] [target customer]The summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Create a Geoffrey Moore-style positioning statement that clearly articulates who your product serves, what need it addresses, how it's categorized, what benefit it delivers, and how it differs from alternatives. Use this when you need to align stakeholders on product strategy, guide messaging, or test if your value proposition is crisp and defensible.
Create a Geoffrey Moore-style positioning statement that clearly articulates who your product serves, what need it addresses, how it's categorized, what benefit it delivers, and how it differs from alternatives. Use this when you need to align stakeholders on product strategy, guide messaging, or test if your value proposition is crisp and defensible.
This is not a tagline or elevator pitch—it's a strategic clarity tool that forces you to make hard choices about target, need, and differentiation.
Works best with: The product and its target customer. Also useful: The unmet need, product category, primary benefit, and nearest alternative — the skill drafts from what you give and asks only for what's missing.
Anything supplied with the invocation itself — text after the skill name, a pasted context dump, or an appended ARGUMENTS: line — counts as answers already given. Use it and skip whatever it covers; don't re-ask.
Arriving empty-handed? That works too. The skill asks for product and target customer first, then works through the Moore template slots.
Example invocation: Positioning statement for LaunchDarkly-style feature flags aimed at platform engineering leads at 200+ eng orgs.
From Crossing the Chasm, Moore's framework splits positioning into two parts:
Value Proposition:
Differentiation Statement:
Use template.md for the full fill-in structure.
Before drafting, ensure you have:
skills/jobs-to-be-done/SKILL.md if needed)If missing context: Use discovery interviews, market research, or customer interviews to fill gaps. Don't guess.
Fill in the template:
## Value Proposition
**For** [specific target customer/persona]
- **that need** [statement of underserved need—focus on pains, gains, JTBD]
- [product or service name]
- **is a** [product category]
- **that** [benefit statement—focus on outcomes, not features]
Quality checks:
Fill in the template:
## Differentiation Statement
- **Unlike** [primary competitor or competitive alternative]
- [product or service name]
- **provides** [unique differentiation—outcomes, not features]
Quality checks:
Ask these questions:
If any answer is "no" or "sort of," revise.
See examples/sample.md for full positioning examples.
Mini example excerpt:
**For** software development teams
- **that need** to reduce email overload and improve real-time collaboration
- Slack
- **is a** team messaging platform
- **that** centralizes communication and makes conversations searchable
Symptom: "For businesses that want to grow" or "For anyone who uses software"
Consequence: No one feels like it's for them. Positioning becomes invisible.
Fix: Pick the first customer segment you'll serve. You can expand later, but positioning works when it's narrow.
Symptom: "That provides AI, automation, analytics, and integrations"
Consequence: Sounds like a feature list, not a benefit. Buyers tune out.
Fix: Lead with the outcome: "That reduces churn by 30% through predictive analytics." The features are how, not why.
Symptom: "Unlike outdated legacy systems" or "Unlike traditional approaches"
Consequence: You're positioning against a straw man. Real buyers don't recognize this alternative.
Fix: Name the actual competitor or substitute behavior. If buyers use Excel, say "Unlike Excel." If they use a competitor, name them.
Symptom: "Provides revolutionary AI" or "Delivers unmatched speed"
Consequence: Claims without evidence = marketing fluff. Buyers ignore it.
Fix: Make it falsifiable: "Provides 10x faster query performance than Snowflake on datasets under 1TB" (can be tested).
Symptom: "Is a next-generation platform for digital transformation"
Consequence: Buyers don't know how to evaluate you. Category = mental shelf. No shelf = no sale.
Fix: Pick a category buyers already understand (CRM, analytics, messaging) OR commit to category creation (requires $$$ and time).
skills/problem-statement/SKILL.md — Defines the problem positioning addressesskills/jobs-to-be-done/SKILL.md — Informs the "that need" statementskills/proto-persona/SKILL.md — Defines the "For [target]" segmentskills/press-release/SKILL.md — Positioning informs press release messagingprompts/positioning-statement.md in the https://github.com/deanpeters/product-manager-prompts repo.Skill type: Component
Suggested filename: positioning-statement.md
Suggested placement: /skills/components/
Dependencies: References skills/problem-statement/SKILL.md, skills/jobs-to-be-done/SKILL.md, skills/proto-persona/SKILL.md
npx claudepluginhub deanpeters/product-manager-skills --plugin vp-cpo-readiness-advisor2plugins reuse this skill
First indexed Jul 4, 2026
Craft a clear market positioning that differentiates your product and resonates with target customers.
Runs a structured positioning workshop to clarify target customer, unmet needs, category, benefits, and differentiation. Use when product messaging feels fuzzy or generic.
Produces a complete product positioning document using the Dunford framework: competitive alternatives, unique attributes, value, best-fit customer, market category, positioning statement, and tagline.